'Dead' Candidate Elected Mayor in Mexico Village

'Dead' Candidate Elected Mayor in Mexico Village

By MARK STEVENSON
Associated Press
MEXICO CITY
Prosecutors are investigating how a man certified as dead got elected mayor of a village in southern Mexico.

Authorities say relatives of Lenin Carballido used a death certificate showing that he died of a diabetic coma in 2010 to convince police to drop an arrest warrant against him for allegedly participating in a 2004 gang rape.

A living Carballido later ran in, and narrowly won, Sunday’s election in San Agustin Amatengo in Oaxaca state. In his campaign, he posted photos of himself all around the village of 1,400 residents, with slogans like “Now is the Time” and “United for Development.”

But shortly after his victory, the death certificate surfaced with his full name of Leninguer Carballido.

Officials in Oaxaca said Thursday that the certificate had been drawn up and signed by a public registry official, but that the information had been faked.

Carballido’s party, the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, known as the PRD, said it had been fooled by the candidate.

Carballido didn’t answer his cellphone Thursday.

Haydee Reyes Soto, the director of the Oaxaca public records office, said the registry official who drew up the fake death certificate used a real official form, signed it and stamped it with an official seal, and even listed it under a file number used to record a real death.

According to records, a woman accused of Carballido and four other men of having raped her in Oaxaca city in 2004.

Mayra Ricardez, spokeswoman for the Oaxaca state prosecutors’ office, said the arrest warrant against Carballido was “never served, because his family showed officers a false death certificate.”

Ricardez said the statute of limitations had not run out on the crime.

It seems unlikely that Carballido will be able to take office in San Agustin Amatengo, an impoverished village near the city of Oaxaca where many residents left in the 2000s to seek work in the United States and elsewhere.

One San Agustin Amatengo official, who said he could not speak on the record about a criminal case, said residents hadn’t been aware of the candidate’s past.

On Thursday, the Oaxaca state prosecutors’ office issued a statement saying it would do everything it could to put him in jail, even if he is formally sworn in as mayor, and was considering whether he might also face charges on election-law violations.

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